Summary The float-equipped, turbine-engine, DHC-3 Otter departed from Tasu, British Columbia, at about 1940 Pacific daylight saving time (PDT), with the pilot and two passengers on board, on a charter, visual flight rules (VFR) flight to Alliford Bay, 26 nautical miles to the north. When the aircraft did not arrive at destination, the operator initiated a search. The aircraft wreckage was located the following day, 18 nautical miles (nm) south of Alliford Bay, in rugged terrain at an elevation of 1,700 feet above sea level (asl). The aircraft was destroyed, and there were no survivors. Ce rapport est galement disponible en franais. Other Factual Information The aircraft was certified, equipped, and maintained in accordance with existing regulations and approved procedures. There was no evidence of any pre-impact mechanical or structural failure. The weight and centre of gravity of the aircraft were within the prescribed limits. The pilot was qualified for the flight. There was no evidence that physiological factors affected the pilot's performance. The aircraft had left Alliford Bay at 1836 PDT and flown to Tasu, on the south end of Newcombe Inlet, to pick up two passengers. As was the informal practice when route weather information was required, the Harbour Air flight dispatcher had called the Sewell Inlet logging camp, located two thirds of the way along the flight-planned route, and requested weather information. There was no weather reporting station at Sewell Inlet and no values of ceiling or visibility were provided to the Harbour Air dispatcher or recorded elsewhere. The dispatcher was advised by an employee at the campsite that there was light drizzle at this location, and that the visibility was restricted by fog. The 2000 PDT Environment Canada actual weather report for the Sandspit airport, 6 nm east of Alliford Bay, was as follows: sky condition 900 feet scattered, 2,800 feet scattered, estimated ceiling 4,700 feet broken, 10,000 feet overcast, visibility 15 miles in light rain showers, temperature 14 degrees Celsius, dewpoint 11 degrees Celsius, wind 240 degrees magnetic at 6 knots, and altimeter setting 29.86 inches of Mercury. At about 1940 PDT, the aircraft departed from Tasu for the 20-minute flight back to Alliford Bay. A witness reported seeing the Otter flying north from Newcombe Inlet and into the valley where it was later found. The witness recalled that, at his position 4 nm south of the accident site, there had been a heavy rain shower lasting several minutes, which had diminished to a light drizzle when the aircraft flew overhead. He was unable to estimate the ceiling or cloud cover at the time. The pilot's planned route was to leave Tasu heading toward the north end of Newcombe Inlet, cross some low terrain for about two miles, and then turn eastward through a valley to Sewell Inlet en route to Alliford Bay. Just north of the turn-off to Sewell Inlet, there is a valley leading northward into a box canyon where the terrain rises abruptly to 3,350 feet asl. The two valleys are similar in appearance and both have a creek and a road following the valley floor. The aircraft flew past the valley leading to Sewell Inlet, continued north into the valley leading to the box canyon, and subsequently struck the side of the valley at 1,700 feet asl. Wreckage damage and impact scars indicated that the aircraft was in controlled, wings-level flight and on a heading of about 210 degrees magnetic when it struck the ground. At the accident site, there was characteristic evidence that the engine was delivering power, and the speed at impact was estimated to have been about 80 miles per hour. The Pratt Whitney PT6 A-135 turbine engine was later examined at the engine manufacturer's facility in Montreal; it was concluded that the engine was operational at the time of impact, and that it was capable of producing maximum rated power. The power setting at the time of impact was not established.